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Last week, a friend of mine in Hong Kong brought to my attention an animal-related news story. It seems “scores of crocodiles perished” in a Shenzen, China zoo called Rural Grand View Garden, after “suffering a barrage of trash and projectiles from callous visitors.”

Why? Apparently, the reptiles weren’t moving enough for the paying visitors and were subsequently “pelted with random objects” to see if they were alive.

While I could take a wide range of angles in writing about this incident, it was a related story on a U.S.-based green (sic) website that really struck a chord.

Stephen Messenger at Treehugger.com opined: “While zoos are usually intended to give visitors an up-close look at many fascinating animals that would otherwise only be seen in the wild, a recent incident at a zoo in China may be far more revealing of a dark aspect of human nature.”

Not surprisingly, Messenger’s ill-informed reaction obscures the realities behind zoos (see below) and the fact that “human nature” is a hazy concept rendered even more meaningless when separated from the relentless social conditioning we all face.

More importantly, Treehugger.com -- and virtually everyone else -- ignores the privilege of speciesism. Hierarchal constructs are deeply woven into the dominant culture but rarely does anyone discuss man’s domination over non-human life as a form of privilege. What transpired at that zoo in China should come as no shock within a society that accepts veal crates, vivisection labs, fur farms, and trawling nets (etc. etc.) as normal.

Angela Davis, someone who knows a thing or two about challenging privilege, has declared her vegan status to be “part of a revolutionary perspective -- how we not only discover more compassionate relations with human beings but how we develop compassionate relations with the other creatures with whom we share this planet.”

Until Every Cage is EmptyAnother angle on this story jumped out at me, thanks to this comment from an “animal breeder” at the Rural Grand View Garden: “Our animals should be treated fairly,” he stated, apparently without a hint of irony. “We hope our visitors will use some self-discipline and be nicer to them.”

Here’s a little of what the media regularly omits when reporting on zoos:

They do little to nothing to seriously address the underlying causes of habitat loss and thereby let the perpetrators off the hook.

Warehousing endangered species sends the frightening subliminal message that it's acceptable to spend money to view animals in enclosures while, for example, forests are being clear cut to make way for doomed livestock -- depriving many of those same animals the freedom to live in their own habitats.

Animals are obviously not meant to live in captivity and, as a result, often display stress and/or psychological dysfunction and just as often, these animals are abused.

Encountering animals in a zoo setting teaches the wrong lessons about how our eco-systems work. Wrong lessons only serve to sustain a system that should be dismantled.

Captive breeding can create a false sense that the battle to save endangered species and habitats is being won.

While some activists remain stuck focusing on minor reforms and tweaks, many are beginning to recognize the stark reality that any system requiring the relentless ruin of resources is not only unsustainable... it's anti-life.

Extinction is ForeverOne need only contemplate the current extinction rate to comprehend the impact of perpetual "growth" upon our shared ecosystem.

"There is a holocaust happening. Right now," Jeff Corwin wrote in the Los Angeles Times in 2009. "And it's not confined to one nation or even one region. It is a global crisis. Species are going extinct en masse." Corwin goes on to explain:

"Every 20 minutes we lose an animal species. If this rate continues, by century's end, 50 percent of all living species will be gone. It is a phenomenon known as the sixth extinction. The fifth extinction took place 65 million years ago when a meteor smashed into the Earth, killing off the dinosaurs and many other species and opening the door for the rise of mammals. Currently, the sixth extinction is on track to dwarf the fifth."

Whether we're talking about habitat loss, climate change, the black market for rare animal parts (third-largest illegal trade in the world, behind weapons and drugs) or any of the other causes behind the mass die-off, as Corwin declares, "it all points to us."

Extinction is much more than just dinosaurs and dodos. Every species shakes its booty in the delicate dance of nature. Subtract one and well, the collective song skips a collective beat. So, if you're not already losing sleep over the sixth extinction, let's talk a little about honeybees.

We may not give honeybees much thought but their existence feeds our existence as a fair portion of the human diet relies on them (specifically commercial honeybees) at the critical early stages of its development. It's been found that bees, birds, and bats affect 35 percent of the world's crop production, increasing the output of 87 of the leading food crops worldwide.

This is why the recent disappearance of honeybees -- Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) -- is an excellent example of how seemingly separated species are inherently intertwined.

While the condemned creatures I've listed so far are already gone, we can still take immediate action to save many more (including ourselves). Currently, there are over 4,200 species of animals deemed "critically endangered" or "endangered" worldwide.

As of 2009, for example, wild ocelots are gone from all U.S. states except Texas. The estimated U.S. population is 195 of which 95 are captive.

Whether you call it a cage, a cell, a jail, a pen, a ward, a prison, a wildlife center, or an enclosure… captivity is captivity.

A culture that confines and abuses animals for profit is highly likely to regularly promote and engage in other forms of violence and exploitation.

In the name of securing a future for all the earth's species, we must cultivate, refine, hone, re-invent, and ultimately expand an alternative form of human culture. We must continue to occupy and recruit and include more and more voices and ideas.

It's too late for the long-extinct Confused Moth. It's not too late for the confused human to reject the pervasive conditioning and programming of the 1% and view the future with new and decidedly clear eyes.